Barrage of blockbusters pushes tech M&A spending to post-Bubble high

Contact: Brenon Daly

Fittingly for a year that has seen an unprecedented number of blockbuster transactions, Dell’s $63.1bn reach for EMC pushed 2015 into record territory for recent spending on tech, media and telecom (TMT) transactions. According to 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase, acquirers around the globe have spent $475bn on TMT deals so far this year. That handily tops the previous full-year total of $420bn from 2007, which had marked the highest level of spending since the Internet bubble burst in 2000.

Overall, 2015 has seen two of the three largest TMT transactions recorded in the KnowledgeBase over the past 15 years. In addition to Dell’s planned purchase of EMC, this year also featured Charter Communications’ $56.7bn acquisition of Time Warner Cable in May. Other big prints in 2015 include Avago’s $37bn pickup of Broadcom in May (the semiconductor industry’s largest-ever consolidation) and $17bn deals from both Intel and Nokia.

So far in 2015 we’ve tallied 63 transactions valued at more than $1bn in the KnowledgeBase. That exactly matches the number of billion-dollar deals during the same period in the previous record year of 2007. However, there’s a lot more money attached to this year’s transactions. The median price for each of the big prints in 2015 is $2.5bn, compared with just $2bn for each deal in 2007. Skewed by these blockbuster TMT transactions, M&A spending is now tracking to about $600bn for the full year. That would shatter 2007’s previous record for spending by a full 40%.

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As black swans darken summer sky, Q3 tech M&A gets grounded

Contact: Brenon Daly

Tech acquirers’ confidence eroded unmistakably in mid-August as equity markets around the world got routed, with some indexes tumbling hundreds of points in a single session. As the economic outlook dimmed around the globe, valuations for buyers and their holdings dropped as well. If the stock market uncertainty didn’t knock buyers out of the tech M&A market entirely, it at least caused them to scale back their acquisitions. Just seven of Q3’s largest 20 deals came after the mid-August turmoil, according to 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase. Spending in the back half of the quarter fell 20% compared with the first half.

Slowed by the mid-quarter bear market, spending on tech, telecom and media (TMT) transactions across the globe in the July-September period totaled $81bn. Although that amount is a fairly representative quarterly total for 2013-14, it represents a dramatic slowdown from earlier this year. Q3 spending stands at less than half the level of M&A spending in Q2 and one-third lower than Q1, which kicked off 2015’s record run. On a comparative basis, the value of acquisitions in both Q1 and Q2 surged about 50% from the same quarters in 2014, while spending in the just-completed Q3 declined 21% compared with Q3 2014.

Viewed more expansively, the Q3 slowdown might have pushed back the date when spending in 2015 on TMT transactions sets a new post-bubble record, but the record will nonetheless fall this year. (Indeed, if this summer had simply continued the average monthly M&A spending we had seen in the first half of the year, 2015 would have already topped the recent record of $420bn set in the prelapsarian year of 2007.) As it stands, dealmakers have spent $407bn on TMT acquisitions so far this year, just a few big prints shy of the highest level of spending since 2000, according to 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase.

See our full report on both M&A and IPO activity in Q3, as well as a look ahead to activity through the rest of 2015.

For more real-time information on tech M&A, follow us on Twitter @451TechMnA.

Recent quarterly deal flow

Period Deal volume Deal value
Q3 2015 1,115 $81bn
Q2 2015 1,056 $205bn
Q1 2015 1,032 $120bn
Q4 2014 1,028 $65bn
Q3 2014 1,049 $102bn
Q2 2014 1,005 $141bn
Q1 2014 854 $82bn
Q4 2013 787 $64bn
Q3 2013 859 $73bn
Q2 2013 760 $48bn
Q1 2013 798 $65bn
Q4 2012 824 $65bn
Q3 2012 880 $39bn
Q2 2012 878 $44bn
Q1 2012 920 $35bn

Source: 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase

Microsoft adds Adallom

Contact: Adrian Sanabria Brenon Daly

Continuing its accelerated shopping spree, Microsoft has reached for infosec startup Adallom. Although terms weren’t released, reports from newspapers in Israel, where Adallom has its roots, peg the price at $250m-320m. Assuming those reports are reasonably accurate, the acquisition would be larger than our understanding of the Aorato buy last November. Aorato stands as Microsoft’s most recent security purchase, and the technology will run alongside the just-acquired technology from fellow Israeli company Adallom.

The Adallom pickup fills a gap between cloud-based IAM and third party SaaS products, allowing Microsoft customers to add much broader control over user authorization and activity within internal (Office 365) and third-party SaaS applications such as Salesforce, Workday and Google Apps. This extension of user permissions and directory services creates a layer of monitoring and control not previously possible in the traditional enterprise. Also, with Office 365 as one of the most popular services for vendors such as Adallom to enhance, Microsoft now has the opportunity to offer much greater control, visibility and security to existing customers.

Microsoft’s purchase of Adallom is the tech giant’s twelfth transaction of 2015, which is twice as many as it has averaged in the same period each year over the past half-decade. Moreover, virtually all of the companies that Microsoft has snagged this year have been relatively small startups. (All but one of the startups acquired in 2015 has raised $50m or less in total funding.) In years past, Microsoft has typically announced a 10-digit deal (e.g., Nokia devices, Yammer, Skype) along with the technology tuck-ins. Of course, that shift to smaller targets might have something to do with the billion-dollar write-downs Microsoft has made on several of its larger acquisitions inked under previous CEO Steve Ballmer.

Recent Microsoft M&A activity

Period Number of announced transactions*
January 1 – September 8 2015 12
January 1 – September 8 2014 7
January 1 – September 8 2013 7
January 1 – September 8 2012 5
January 1 – September 8 2011 3
January 1 – September 8 2010 0

Source: 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase *Excludes purchases of domain names and IP addresses

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Cisco closes in on OpenDNS

Contact: Brenon Daly

In its third-largest IT security acquisition, Cisco will pay $635m in cash for OpenDNS to shore up its threat-detection and -prevention portfolio. The deal comes a year after the networking giant participated in the 10-year-old startup’s series C funding round. (The $35m investment announced last May brought the total amount raised by OpenDNS to $51m.)

The purchase continues Cisco’s practice of paying rich multiples as it shops in information security. According to 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase , Cisco has now acquired 18 security companies in the past decade and a half, mostly smaller startups. (All but three of those transactions cost the networking giant less than $200m.) We would note that although Cisco’s security business generates less than 5% of its total revenue, infosec acquisitions have accounted for 16% of the company’s overall M&A activity since 2002.

In its other large infosec purchases, Cisco paid $2.7bn, or nearly 11x trailing sales, for Sourcefire and $830m for IronPort Systems, which works out to slightly more than 8x trailing revenue. OpenDNS generated about $40m in trailing bookings and was on pace to double annual bookings to roughly $60m for full-year 2015.

That would mean Cisco is paying about 15x trailing bookings for fast-growing OpenDNS. Obviously, the price-to-revenue multiple for OpenDNS would be higher than that, likely falling in the neighborhood of twice the valuation that Cisco paid in its two other significant infosec deals. The valuation of the network security vendor stands out even more considering the recent focus in the IT security industry on endpoint protection, which has resulted in valuations there being pushed to historically high levels. Cisco expects to close the pickup of OpenDNS by the end of its first fiscal quarter, which wraps in October.

For more real-time information on tech M&A, follow us on Twitter @451TechMnA.

A monster May for M&A

Contact: Brenon Daly

All three segments of tech, media and telecom (TMT) put up gigantic prints in May, pushing spending in the just-completed month to a level we’d typically see tallied over a half-year period in most post-recession years. The record monthly spending of $122bn was boosted by the largest-ever cable deal as well as the biggest pure tech transaction since the bubble burst. Both Charter Communications’ $56.7bn reach for Time Warner Cable and Avago Technologies’ $37bn purchase of Broadcom figure into the 10 largest TMT deals since 2002, according to 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase

Undeniably, the two blockbuster prints dominated last month’s M&A, accounting for roughly three-quarters of the total spending. But even backing out those two acquisitions, spending came in at a robust $29bn, which is higher than the typical post-recession monthly average. More importantly, the activity spread to a broad number of markets, with billion-dollar-plus deals announced in May by hosting provider Equinix, ambitious telco Verizon and even EMC, which has found itself under scrutiny by activist shareholders, among others.

Last month’s astonishing level of spending – the only time in the past 13 years that monthly spending has topped $100bn – pushes total receipts for TMT M&A this year to $286m. That means that in just five months so far in 2015, acquirers have already spent more money on deals than they did for the entire year for every single year except one from 2009-14, according to the KnowledgeBase.

The one surprise from May, however, is the relatively shallow flow of deals. We tallied only 270 transactions, which stands as the lowest total for May since 2009. That’s down about 20% from the average of the preceding four months of 2015, and marks the first time in more than three years that we’ve seen a month-over-month decline in the number of prints.

2015 monthly deal flow

Period Deal volume Deal value
January 2015 357 $11bn
February 2015 332 $48bn
March 2015 336 $61bn
April 2015 358 $44bn
May 2015 270 $122bn

Source: 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase

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Webinar: 451 Research and Morrison & Foerster M&A Leaders’ Survey

Contact: Brenon Daly

Even as tech dealmaking clips along at a post-bubble record rate in 2015, the overwhelming view from the M&A Leaders’ Survey from 451 Research and Morrison & Foerster is that business is expected to get even more brisk as the year progresses. To find out more about the forecast, as well as how the survey sentiment maps to both the current M&A market and current M&A practices, join 451 Research and Morrison & Foerster on Tuesday, May 19 at 1pm EST (10am PST) for an information-packed webinar. Click here to register.

The webinar will cover not only the forecast for acquisition activity for the next six months, but also what buyers expect to have to pay to cover their purchases and what strategies will be driving those deals. Additionally, Morrison & Foerster will provide real-world insight on some of the key findings around recent trends in structuring transactions and other practical M&A considerations. To register for the complimentary webinar, simply click here.

M&A activity forecast for the next six months

Survey date Increase Stay the same Decrease
April 2015 61% 30% 9%
October 2014 48% 36% 16%
April 2014 72% 24% 4%
October 2013 50% 43% 7%
April 2013 54% 27% 19%
October 2012 49% 34% 17%
April 2012 59% 33% 8%

Source: M&A Leaders’ Survey from 451 Research / Morrison & Foerster

For more real-time information on tech M&A, follow us on Twitter @451TechMnA.

Survey: Already busy tech acquirers expect to be even busier

Contact: Brenon Daly

Even as tech M&A activity clips along at a post-bubble record rate in 2015, business is expected to get even more brisk as the year progresses. Slightly more than six out of 10 tech dealmakers and investment bankers expect their pace of acquisitions to accelerate over the next half-year, the second-most-bullish response in the seven editions of the M&A Leaders’ Survey from 451 Research and Morrison & Foerster. The 61% of respondents forecasting a pickup in activity over the next six months is almost seven times the number (9%) anticipating a slowdown.

The solidly bullish outlook for 2015 – with nine out of 10 respondents forecasting that their M&A activity will either hold steady or pick up through October – comes as the year has started busier than any year since the Internet bubble burst. In just the first four months of 2015, tech acquirers have announced some $160bn worth of global TMT transactions, according to 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase. The year-to-date spending, which is already higher than the full-year total for recession-wracked 2009, puts 2015 on track for just shy of a half-trillion dollars of M&A consideration.

We would also note that the last time respondents to the M&A Leaders’ Survey from 451 Research and Morrison & Foerster clearly signaled their intent to acquire, the projection did indeed come through in prints. In the survey from April 2014, a record seven out of 10 respondents (72%) indicated that they planned to accelerate their M&A in the year. Last year’s total value of deals hit an astonishing $390bn – a post-recession record that came in at basically twice the average annual spending from 2009-2013, according to the KnowledgeBase.

Look for a full report on the M&A Leaders’ Survey from 451 Research and Morrison & Foerster – including what will be driving deals in the coming years, as well as what buyers expect to have to pay for those transactions – on the 451 Research website later today and in tomorrow’s 451 Market Insight.

M&A spending outlook for the next six months

Survey date Increase Stay the same Decrease
April 2015 61% 30% 9%
October 2014 48% 36% 16%
April 2014 72% 24% 4%
October 2013 50% 43% 7%
April 2013 54% 27% 19%
October 2012 49% 34% 17%
April 2012 59% 33% 8%

Source: M&A Leaders’ Survey from 451 Research / Morrison & Foerster

An imbalance in the market for unicorns

Contact: Brenon Daly

The herd of unicorns gets bigger every day. But as the supply of these startups valued at more than $1bn continues to swell, we can’t help but note that on the other side of the equation, the demand isn’t really keeping pace, at least not outside a handful of elite investors. For the most part, the broader market hasn’t opened the exits for these unicorns to realize the value that’s being lavished on them.

So far this year, for instance, we haven’t seen any sales of VC-backed startups for more than about a half-billion dollars, according to 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase. Further, in a 451 Research survey last December, four out of 10 (42%) corporate M&A executives told us they expect the M&A valuations for privately held companies to actually decline in 2015 compared with their valuations last year. That was the most bearish forecast for exit values of startups from their would-be buyers since the recession year of 2009.

Meanwhile, the IPO market isn’t particularly rewarding these days, either. Box – a unicorn that had been a darling of the late-stage investment community through nearly a dozen rounds of funding – hasn’t created any additional value as a NYSE-listed company than it did as a private company. (And based on the fact that an astounding 40% of Box’s shares are sold short, Wall Street is very clearly betting that its flat-lined valuation is still too high.)

Despite the recent muted returns for VCs, unicorns continue to get fed. For instance, Slack, a collaboration tool that’s less than two years old, has reportedly doubled its valuation since previously notching a $1.2bn price in an October funding.

Obviously, we’re looking at an extremely short exit period of just the first quarter of 2015. And we’re conscious that in most cases, investors are placing bets today that they hope will pay off maybe a half-decade from now. But for right now, when we look at both ends of the market for highly valued startups, we can see how you buy a unicorn but we wonder how you go about selling it.

Projected change in private company M&A valuations

Period Increase Stay the same Decrease
December 2014 for 2015 29% 29% 42%
December 2013 for 2014 29% 55% 16%
December 2012 for 2013 28% 39% 33%
December 2011 for 2012 35% 26% 39%
December 2010 for 2011 71% 20% 9%
December 2009 for 2010 58% 36% 6%
December 2008 for 2009 4% 9% 87%
December 2007 for 2008 39% 28% 33%

Source: 451 Research Tech Corporate Development Outlook Survey

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Telcos get busy again with M&A in February

Contact: Brenon Daly

Massive acquisitions by telcos, which pushed M&A spending to a recent record in 2014, once again helped to inflate the value of deals announced in the just-completed month of February. Overall, tech and telco acquirers spent $48bn on transactions across the globe, according to The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase. However, the three largest deals, which were all telco-related purchases, accounted for $30bn, or 60%, of the total spending in February.

Last month’s big-ticket acquisitions by BT Global Services, Frontier Communications and American Tower revived the telco shopping spree from 2014. Last year, telco and media purchases accounted for roughly half of the $439bn we tallied in M&A spending – the highest level in 14 years. (See our full report on M&A last year, as well as the outlook for this this year.) There were no significant telco transactions in January, which is one of the main reasons why M&A spending for the first month of 2015 was just one-fifth the amount spent in the second month of 2015.

Beyond the telco consolidation, there are clear indications that the broader tech M&A market is picking up the pace after the slow start. Expedia did its largest-ever deal last month, announcing the $1.4bn pickup of Orbitz Worldwide. And Canon, an infrequent acquirer, inked a $2.8bn buy. Even excluding the trio of telco deals, there were four transactions in February valued at more than $1bn – twice as many 10-digit acquisitions announced in January.

Additionally, the overall volume of M&A remained high in February. We tallied 331 transactions announced last month. That’s nearly one-third more than February 2014 or February 2013. Shoppers included Check Point Software, which announced its first acquisition in more than three years; four purchases by the insatiable acquirer Google; and a double-barrel set of deals by Under Armour.

For more real-time information on tech M&A, follow us on Twitter @451TechMnA.

A change in command at Courion?

Contact: Brenon Daly

After a fitful and protracted M&A process, Courion has been sold to a private equity (PE) firm, according to several market sources. The deal, which we understand is closed, but has not been announced, would be the third acquisition by a buyout shop of an identity-related security vendor in the past half-year. However, our understanding is that Courion got about half the valuation of the other two larger identity and access management (IAM) vendors that were recently acquired.

Several sources indicated Courion traded at around $70m, which works out to roughly 2x sales. Rivals BeyondTrust and SailPoint sold for closer to 3x sales and 5x, respectively. (Subscribers to 451 Research M&A KnowledgeBase can see our estimated terms for BeyondTrust and SailPoint.)

In addition to those financial acquirers, many of the largest strategic shoppers – including Microsoft, IBM and CA – have been snapping up IAM technology, in part to help secure cloud offerings. The reason? Security remains the top-ranked inhibitor of cloud technology adoption, according to ChangeWave Research, a service of 451 Research. In the cloud – with its centralized IT resources and pooled data – knowing who is who and who has access to what is fundamental. Further, when users are accessing corporate resources that live outside the firewall, often from devices no longer under enterprise control, perimeter-based access controls are no longer effective.

That has certainly resonated with customers. In a survey of more than 200 IT security professionals in 2014, 451 Research’s TheInfoPro found that one-quarter (24%) of respondents forecast that they would be spending more in 2015 on identity-related security technology than they did in 2014. Not a single respondent indicated they would be trimming their budget for this crucial technology. (Identity was the only specific sector – among the dozen that we asked about – that didn’t have a single response indicating lower year-on-year spending.)

As is often the case in emerging markets, however, the strong demand for IAM hasn’t been evenly distributed across the vendors. Symplified, an early entrant in the IAM market that raised nearly $50m in venture funding, wound down last summer and sold its assets to EMC for pennies on the dollar. And while Courion is a far cry from the scrap-sale of Symplified, the company had struggled to put up growth in recent years. That blunted VC’s interest in putting new money into Courion, which hadn’t raised in about a decade, and ultimately put pressure on its valuation.

For more real-time information on tech M&A, follow us on Twitter @451TechMnA.